net price - определение. Что такое net price
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Что (кто) такое net price - определение

VALUATION IN FINANCE
Discounted present value; Net Present Value; Net present worth; Discounted price
Найдено результатов: 1780
.NET         
  • dotnet bot, the community mascot for .NET
  • .NET uses the [[Common Language Infrastructure]] (CLI)
FREE AND OPEN-SOURCE SOFTWARE PLATFORM DEVELOPED BY MICROSOFT
Dotnet; DotNet Core; CoreFX; CoreCLR; RyuJIT; CoreRT; .Net Core 3; .NET 5; .NET Core 3; .NET MAUI; .NET 6; .NET 7; .NET 8; .NET Bot; Dotnet Bot; DotNet Bot; .NET Core; .NET (software platform); .NET Core 1.0; .NET Core 1.1; .NET Core 2.0; .NET Core 2.1; .NET Core 2.2; .NET Core 3.0; .NET Core 3.1
Net sport         
  • A competitive table tennis game.
  • Women playing tennis at the 2007 US Open.
SPORT WHERE A NET IS A STANDARD PART OF THE GAME
Net sports; Net (sports); Net (sport); Net sport
A net sport is a sport where a net is a standard part of the game, especially where the net separates the opponents. The object of these games is to hit the ball or bird over the net back to the opponent.
Net (economics)         
RESULTANT AMOUNT AFTER ACCOUNTING FOR THE SUM OR DIFFERENCE OF TWO OR MORE VARIABLES
Gross (economics); Net value; Nett (economics)
A net (sometimes written nett) value is the resultant amount after accounting for the sum or difference of two or more variables.
price tag         
  • An orange price tag roll
LABEL DECLARING THE PRICE OF AN ITEM FOR SALE
Price tagging; Pricetags; Price label
also price-tag (price tags)
1.
If something has a price tag of a particular amount, that is the amount that you must pay in order to buy it. (WRITTEN)
The price tag on the 34-room white Regency mansion is ?17.5 million.
N-COUNT
2.
In a shop, the price tag on an article for sale is a small piece of card or paper which is attached to the article and which has the price written on it.
N-COUNT
price tag         
  • An orange price tag roll
LABEL DECLARING THE PRICE OF AN ITEM FOR SALE
Price tagging; Pricetags; Price label
¦ noun a label showing the price of an item.
?the cost of something.
Price tag         
  • An orange price tag roll
LABEL DECLARING THE PRICE OF AN ITEM FOR SALE
Price tagging; Pricetags; Price label
A price tag is a label declaring the price of an item for sale. It may be a sticker or attached by twist tie or other means.
Fishing net         
  • access-date = 2015-04-08}}</ref>
  • [[Scuba diver]]'s net cutter
  • Pieces of the [[Antrea Net]], 8,300 BC, the oldest-known fishing net
  • A ''[[retiarius]]'' ("net fighter"), with a [[trident]] and cast net, fighting a ''[[secutor]]'' (mosaic, 4th century BC)
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  • Cucuteni-Trypillian]] ceramic weights
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  • A Japanese [[glass fishing float]]
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NET USED FOR FISHING
Fish net; Fishing nets; Trammel (fishing net); Fyke; Trammel net; Fishing net float; Push net; Pushnet; Drive-in net; Fyke net
A fishing net is a net used for fishing. Nets are devices made from fibers woven in a grid-like structure.
fyke         
  • access-date = 2015-04-08}}</ref>
  • [[Scuba diver]]'s net cutter
  • Pieces of the [[Antrea Net]], 8,300 BC, the oldest-known fishing net
  • A ''[[retiarius]]'' ("net fighter"), with a [[trident]] and cast net, fighting a ''[[secutor]]'' (mosaic, 4th century BC)
  • 140px
  • 140px
  • 140px
  • 140px
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  • Cucuteni-Trypillian]] ceramic weights
  • 140px
  • 140px
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  • A Japanese [[glass fishing float]]
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NET USED FOR FISHING
Fish net; Fishing nets; Trammel (fishing net); Fyke; Trammel net; Fishing net float; Push net; Pushnet; Drive-in net; Fyke net
[f??k]
¦ noun chiefly US a bag net for catching fish.
Origin
C19: from Du. fuik 'fish trap'.
Price controls         
  • World War II poster about US price controls
  • A World War II-era shop display promoting price controls.
  • Protesters call for an increased legal [[minimum wage]] as part of the "Fight for $15" effort to require a $15 per hour minimum wage in 2015. A government-set minimum wage is a price floor on the price of labour.
GOVERNMENTAL RESTRICTIONS ON THE PRICES THAT CAN BE CHARGED FOR GOODS AND SERVICES
Price control; Price freeze; Fixed price system; Maximum price; Prices control; Price Controls; Administered price; Administered pricing; Liberalization of prices; Regulate the price; Set the price
Price controls are restrictions set in place and enforced by governments, on the prices that can be charged for goods and services in a market. The intent behind implementing such controls can stem from the desire to maintain affordability of goods even during shortages, and to slow inflation, or, alternatively, to ensure a minimum income for providers of certain goods or to try to achieve a living wage.
exercise price         
  • Strike price labeled on the graph of a [[call option]]. To the right, the option is in-the-money, and to the left, it is out-of-the-money.
PRE-ARRANGED PRICE AT WHICH THE OWNER OF THE OPTION HAS THE RIGHT TO BUY/SELL THE UNDERLYING SECURITY
Strike (options); Strike (finance); Strike Price; Exercise price; Striking price
¦ noun Stock Exchange the price per share at which the owner of a traded option is entitled to buy or sell the underlying security.

Википедия

Net present value

The net present value (NPV) or net present worth (NPW) applies to a series of cash flows occurring at different times. The present value of a cash flow depends on the interval of time between now and the cash flow. It also depends on the discount rate. NPV accounts for the time value of money. It provides a method for evaluating and comparing capital projects or financial products with cash flows spread over time, as in loans, investments, payouts from insurance contracts plus many other applications.

Time value of money dictates that time affects the value of cash flows. For example, a lender may offer 99 cents for the promise of receiving $1.00 a month from now, but the promise to receive that same dollar 20 years in the future would be worth much less today to that same person (lender), even if the payback in both cases was equally certain. This decrease in the current value of future cash flows is based on a chosen rate of return (or discount rate). If for example there exists a time series of identical cash flows, the cash flow in the present is the most valuable, with each future cash flow becoming less valuable than the previous cash flow. A cash flow today is more valuable than an identical cash flow in the future because a present flow can be invested immediately and begin earning returns, while a future flow cannot.

NPV is determined by calculating the costs (negative cash flows) and benefits (positive cash flows) for each period of an investment. After the cash flow for each period is calculated, the present value (PV) of each one is achieved by discounting its future value (see Formula) at a periodic rate of return (the rate of return dictated by the market). NPV is the sum of all the discounted future cash flows.

Because of its simplicity, NPV is a useful tool to determine whether a project or investment will result in a net profit or a loss. A positive NPV results in profit, while a negative NPV results in a loss. The NPV measures the excess or shortfall of cash flows, in present value terms, above the cost of funds. In a theoretical situation of unlimited capital budgeting, a company should pursue every investment with a positive NPV. However, in practical terms a company's capital constraints limit investments to projects with the highest NPV whose cost cash flows, or initial cash investment, do not exceed the company's capital. NPV is a central tool in discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis and is a standard method for using the time value of money to appraise long-term projects. It is widely used throughout economics, financial analysis, and financial accounting.

In the case when all future cash flows are positive, or incoming (such as the principal and coupon payment of a bond) the only outflow of cash is the purchase price, the NPV is simply the PV of future cash flows minus the purchase price (which is its own PV). NPV can be described as the "difference amount" between the sums of discounted cash inflows and cash outflows. It compares the present value of money today to the present value of money in the future, taking inflation and returns into account.

The NPV of a sequence of cash flows takes as input the cash flows and a discount rate or discount curve and outputs a present value, which is the current fair price. The converse process in discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis takes a sequence of cash flows and a price as input and as output the discount rate, or internal rate of return (IRR) which would yield the given price as NPV. This rate, called the yield, is widely used in bond trading.

Many computer-based spreadsheet programs have built-in formulae for PV and NPV.